"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing"Edmund Burke

Tabberone Disclaimer

We recommend a seller pay particular attention to the wording of their auction and use a disclaimer when appropriate.

As William Peceau told us, "There is a difference between light red and red light."

When selling an item crafted from licensed material, auction titles are important. For example, lets say you are selling a
baby bib made from licensed Disney fabric. Your action title should read something like this:

Baby Bib Made From Winnie The Pooh Fabric

Not something like this:

Winnie The Pooh Baby Bib

And not something like this:

Winnie The Pooh Baby Bib Home Made

The first auction title is more precise and cannot be considered deceiving.

Disclaimer Do's and Do Not's

Do put a disclaimer close to the top of the listing before the picture.
Do Not put the disclaimer only at the bottom of the listing unless it is there a for second time.
Do Not put your disclaimer in smaller font or cutsie font. It must be in font as large as your listing.
Do Not get overly wordy and long-winded in your disclaimer. Just the facts.
Do Not make your disclaimer hard to read with fancy colors and backgrounds.

A disclaimer only at the bottom of the listing could be ignored and then it would be ineffective. Effective disclaimers at the top and the bottom of a listing
are almost impossible to ignore. Effective disclaimers are your friend. Use them. You want the wording of the disclaimer
in the same size font as the description. We recommend something like what we call the Tabberone Disclaimer.
It is large enough to be seen easily and colorful enough to attract attention but it does not detract from your message which is that product
which you are trying to sell:

This is not a licensed Disney product. It is however, hand-crafted from licensed Disney fabric.
I am not affiliated with or sponsored by Disney Enterprises.

Cut and Paste this code into your listing

<!-- End Tabberone Disclaimer HTML code -->

You can change the font size by changing the number after the code font size=. The disclaimer font should be at least as large as
your listing font. DO NOT make the disclaimer smaller than your listing font.

If you add wording, be careful because wordy disclaimers can easily be ignored. You can make the above disclaimer box wider by increasing the
table width= value. It is expressed in a percentage figure. Enlarge the width of the box by making the percentage number larger.

The br code is a line break. Change table bgcolor= to change the background color. But keep the color light so the wording can be easily read.
A hard-to-read disclaimer is as bad as no disclaimer. A light background color calls attention to the disclaimer.

DO NOT use cutesy coloring that YOU LIKE but that is hard for others to read. You are selling an item, not a painting or work of art.

Do not get into wordy comments about the law and court cases. Your potential buyer can get turned off by those. If you wish, link to the Tabberone
web page on Licensed Fabrics:

http://www.tabberone.com/Trademarks/CopyrightLaw/LicensedFabric.shtml

But only use this link with the bottom disclaimer, not the top disclaimer.

The Court likewise rejects Graham Webb's argument that the warnings Drug Emporium has posted disclaiming any affiliation with or authorization by Graham Webb
are ineffective and not a question properly resolved by summary judgment. While it is true that the effectiveness of a disclaimer in a Lanham Act case may generally
be a question of fact, see Home Box Office, Inc. v. Showtime/Movie Channel, Inc., 832 F.2d 1311, 1315 (2nd Cir.1987), a disclaimer expressly
declaring that the seller is "not affiliated" with the owner of the trademark or is "not an authorized distributor" of the trademark owner's products has been held to be
an effective means of preventing confusion in the minds of consumers as to affiliation with the owner of the trademark. Matrix Essentials,
756 F.Supp. at 282. As in Matrix Essentials, the only reasonable conclusion in this case is that Drug Emporium's warnings to consumers
disclaiming any affiliation with or authorization by Graham Webb effectively prevents likelihood of confusion in the minds of consumers as to
sponsorship or affiliation.